Annotation of www/50.html, Revision 1.2
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2: <html>
3: <head>
4: <title>OpenBSD 5.0 Release</title>
5: <link rev=made href="mailto:www@openbsd.org">
6: <meta name="resource-type" content="document">
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8: <meta name="description" content="OpenBSD 5.0">
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11: <meta name="copyright" content="This document copyright 2011 by OpenBSD.">
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15:
16: <a href="index.html">
17: <img alt="[OpenBSD]" height="30" width="141" hspace="24" src="images/smalltitle.gif" border="0"></a>
18: <hr>
19:
20: <p>
21: <a href="images/MAD.jpg">
22: <img align="left" width="227" height="343" hspace="24" vspace="30"
23: src="images/MAD.jpg" alt="OpenBSD 5.0 logo"></a>
24: <h2><font color="#0000e0">The OpenBSD 5.0 Release:</font></h2>
25: <p>
26: To be released Nov 1, 2011<br>
27: Copyright 1997-2011, Theo de Raadt.<br>
28: <font color="#e00000">ISBN 978-0-9784475-8-8</font>
29: <br>
30: <a href="lyrics.html#50">5.0 Song: "What Me Worry?"</a>
31: <p>
32:
33: <a href="#new">What's New</a><br>
34: <a href="#install">How to install</a><br>
35: <a href="#upgrade">How to upgrade</a><br>
36: <a href="#ports">How to use the ports tree</a><br>
37: <a href="orders.html">Ordering a CD set</a><br>
38:
39: <p>
40: <h3><font color="#0000e0">
41: To get the files for this release:
42: <ul>
43: <li>Pre-order a CDROM from our <a href="orders.html">ordering system</a>.
44: <li>See the information on <a href="ftp.html">The FTP page</a> for
45: a list of mirror machines.
46: <li>Go to the <font color="#e00000">pub/OpenBSD/5.0/</font> directory on
47: one of the mirror sites.
48: <li>Briefly read the rest of this document.
49: <li>Have a look at <a href="errata50.html">The 5.0 Errata page</a> for a list
50: of bugs and workarounds.
51: <li>See a <a href="plus50.html">detailed log of changes</a> between the
52: 4.9 and 5.0 releases.
53: </ul>
54: </font></h3>
55: <br clear=all>
56:
57: <strong>Note:</strong> All applicable copyrights and credits can be found
58: in the applicable file sources found in the files src.tar.gz, sys.tar.gz,
59: xenocara.tar.gz, or in the files fetched via ports.tar.gz. The distribution
60: files used to build packages from the ports.tar.gz file are not included on
61: the CDROM because of lack of space.
62: <p>
63:
64: <a name="new"></a>
65: <hr>
66: <p>
67: <h3><font color="#0000e0">What's New</font></h3>
68: <p>
69: This is a partial list of new features and systems included in OpenBSD 5.0.
70: For a comprehensive list, see the <a href="plus50.html">changelog</a> leading
71: to 5.0.
72: <p>
73:
74: <ul>
75:
1.2 ! deraadt 76: <li>Improved hardware support, including:
! 77: <ul>
! 78: <li>MSI interrupts for many devices, on those architectures which can
! 79: support them (amd64, i386, sparc64 only so far).
! 80: <li>A new dma_alloc(9) API makes it easier for kernel code to allocate
! 81: dma-safe memory. Many drivers (especially network drivers) and
! 82: subsystems (in particular scsi and the buffer cache) were adapted
! 83: to use this.
! 84: <li>As a result, big-memory support has been enabled on all possible
! 85: architectures.
! 86: <li>The rather rare bce(4) driver now copies mbufs all the time, to cope
! 87: with the hardware having a 1GB limit.
! 88: <li>Added hds(4), a driver for Hitachi Modular Storage SCSI devices.
! 89: <li>Added myx(4), a driver for the Myricom Myri-10G 10GB Ethernet devices.
! 90: <li>Added dfs(4), a driver for Dynamic Frequency Switching on some macppc
! 91: systems.
! 92: <li>cardbus(4) and pcmcia(4) support on sgi.
! 93: <li>Suspend/resume support on Loongson Yeelong laptops.
! 94: </ul>
! 95: <p>
! 96:
! 97: <li>Generic network stack improvements:
! 98: <ul>
! 99: <li>Added support for sending Wake on Lan packets using arp(8).
! 100: <li>Permit turning Wake on Lan support on/off using ifconfig(8).
! 101: <li>Added Wake on Lan support to xl(4), re(4), and vr(4).
! 102: <li>Allow ftp-proxy to proxy across rdomains.
! 103: <li>The IPv4 stack will no longer accept ICMP redirects when
! 104: acting as a router.
! 105: <li>By default the IPv6 stack will not process ICMP6 redirects.
! 106: rtsol(8) will turn it back if -F is used.
! 107: <li>Reworked large parts of the dhclient(8) options processing for better
! 108: interoperability.
! 109: <li>Fixed carp(4) to work in IPv6 only setups.
! 110: <li>Make it possible to bind(2) to the local network broadcast address
! 111: on datagram and raw sockets.
! 112: <li>The default multicast reject route is now ignored if the UDP socket
! 113: uses the IP_MULTICAST_IF socket option.
! 114: <li>Make gre(4) work between systems in the same LAN.
! 115: <li>Removed the link1 mode special addressing mode on lo(4).
! 116: <li>Kernel randomization speed and quality improved substantially.
! 117: </ul>
! 118: <p>
! 119:
! 120: <li>Routing daemons and other userland network improvements:
! 121: <ul>
! 122: <li>bgpd(8) no longer bumps the rlimits: the rc.d framework respects
! 123: login classes which is a much better solution.
! 124: <li>Correctly set the network filtersets on reload in bgpd(8).
! 125: <li>The routing socket is now sending RTM_DESYNC messages if the
! 126: socketbuffer overflows.
! 127: <li>Allow ospfd(8) to send out LS updates and other messages
! 128: larger than the MTU.
! 129: <li>Fixed nexthop calculation in ospfd(8) for directly connected P2P links.
! 130: <li>First bits to support opaque LSA in ospfd(8). Only basic redistribute
! 131: logic and LSDB handling for now.
! 132: <li>Creating new interfaces will no longer cause a fatal error in ospf6d(8).
! 133: <li>ospf6d(8) handles link-state changes better.
! 134: <li>Better loopback handling in ospf6d(8).
! 135: <li>No longer install extra multicast routes in ripd(8) and ldpd(8).
! 136: <li>Make kqueue(2) work with sosplice(9).
! 137: <li>Enabled sosplice(9) in relayd(8) for TCP.
! 138: <li>Added support for divert-to which provides some benefits over
! 139: rdr-to in relayd(8).
! 140: <li>Fixed trap sending in snmpd(8).
! 141: <li>Make ping6(8) compare minimum amount of bytes between what
! 142: was received and what was sent out.
! 143: <li>Make traceroute(8) with type-of-service setted (-t) display
! 144: a message if the returned packet has a different tos type.
! 145: <li>Added the socket splicing fields of struct socket to netstat -vP output.
! 146: </ul>
! 147: <p>
! 148:
! 149: <li>pf(4) improvements:
! 150: <ul>
! 151: <li>Make pf(4) reassemble IPv6 fragments. In the forward case, pf
! 152: refragments the packets with the same maximum size.
! 153: <li>Allow pf(4) to filter on the rdomain a packet belongs to.
! 154: <li>Make pf(4) allow userland proxies to establish cross rdomain
! 155: proxy sessions.
! 156: <li>Added IPv6 ACK prioritization in pf(4).
! 157: <li>Change 'set skip on <...>' to work with interface groups.
! 158: <li>pfsync(4) supports IPv6 as network protocol.
! 159: <li>Switched ftp-proxy(8) over to divert-to instead of rdr-to.
! 160: <li>tftp-proxy(8) uses 'divert-to' as well.
! 161: </ul>
! 162: <p>
! 163:
! 164: <li>SCSI improvements:
! 165: <ul>
! 166: <li>most SCSI hardware drivers now use the new iopools infrastructure.
! 167: <li>scsi(4) devices are now all provided with a unique devid, which
! 168: is displayed during the probe process.
! 169: <li>ASC/ASCQ error codes and verbiage now in sync with
! 170: http://www.t10.org/lists/asc-num.txt.
! 171: <li>progress on iSCSI includes better login, better logout, preliminary
! 172: FSM support in iscsid(8), and improved logging and debug information.
! 173: <li>uk(4) can now safely and reliably detach an unknown SCSI device.
! 174: <li>mpath(4) device and kernel support is improved.
! 175: <li>vscsi(4) now ensures output always goes to the correct connection.
! 176: <li>vscsi(4) connections can now be reset gracefully.
! 177: <li>scsi(4) devices on fibre channel fabrics no longer inherit the adapter's
! 178: address.
! 179: </ul>
! 180: <p>
! 181:
! 182: <li>Assorted improvements:
! 183: <ul>
! 184: <li>For additional security, security(8) was rewritten in Perl.
! 185: <li>Mandoc 1.11.4: Now accepts eqn(7) input (no fancy formatting yet)
! 186: and supports -Tutf8 output (but no utf8 input yet).
! 187: <li>Removed a variety of OS-compat emulation code, leaving just the Linux
! 188: support.
! 189: <li>Small improvements to Linux compat (only available on i386).
! 190: <li>Improved our own pkg-config(1) implementation with extended comparison
! 191: scheme and implementing various new options.
! 192: <li>The math library, libm, was fully fleshed out to support all C99 required
! 193: parts. Many bugs for various architectures were fixed along the way.
! 194: <li>malloc(3) is a lot faster and has a few further security features (more
! 195: randomization, as well as the 'S' flag to enable all paranoia checks).
! 196: <li>'make depend' is no longer neccessary in kernel compilation directories
! 197: since the dependencies are calculated automatically.
! 198: <li>Increased the default size of the buffer cache.
! 199: <li>kqueue(2) now works on /dev/random and spliced sockets
! 200: <li>On MBR-based disks, scan through up to 256 extended partition tables
! 201: when looking for an OpenBSD partition table.
! 202: <li>Added POSIX 2008 fdopendir(3) and openat(2) functions, as well as the
! 203: O_CLOEXEC, O_DIRECTORY, and F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC flags.
! 204: <li>Improved lint format string checks and added a few other checks.
! 205: <li>kdump(8) now dumps stat and sockaddr structures, sysctl mib
! 206: strings, and decodes syscall flags and operation bits.
! 207: <li>Improved kernel pool debug checking.
! 208: <li>Improved correctness of signals and various syscalls when rthreads
! 209: are in use.
! 210: <li>Kernel malloc(9) space and stacks moved to non-dma memory.
! 211: <li>Fixed some shutdown/reboot hangs on NFS clients.
! 212: <li>UNIX-domain socket paths are now guaranteed to be NUL-terminated.
! 213: <li>Added support for *wprintf(3), wcs{,n}casecmp(3), and wcsdup(3).
! 214: <li>NULL is now a (void *).
! 215: </ul>
! 216: <p>
! 217:
! 218: <li>Install/Upgrade process changes:
! 219: <ul>
! 220: <li>Completed support for DUID disk installs, and enabled it fully.
! 221: <li>Tried to make sysmerge(8) work in the installer, but ran into small
! 222: problems and decided to disable it.
! 223: <li>Install non-free firmwares from the internet upon first boot, based on a
! 224: question in the installer.
! 225: <li>svnd(4)-like behaviour became the default for vnd(4) devices. This is
! 226: what is used to build the media.
! 227: </ul>
! 228: <p>
! 229:
! 230: <li>rc.d(8) framework improvements:
! 231: <ul>
! 232: <li>rc.d(8) is now also used the base system daemons.
! 233: <li>Backward compatible with the historic way of starting daemons.
! 234: <li>Notify the user by appending (ok) or (failed) in interactive mode.
! 235: <li>Better diagnostics with the introduction of RC_DEBUG.
! 236: </ul>
! 237: <p>
! 238:
! 239: <li>OpenSSH 6.0:
! 240: <ul>
! 241: <li>New features:
! 242: <ul>
! 243: <li>Allow cancellation of port forwardings via the multiplexing socket
! 244: (e.g. "ssh -O cancel -R 2222:127.0.0.1:22 user@host")
! 245: <li>Add wildcard support to PermitOpen (e.g. "PermitOpen localhost:*")
! 246: <li>A new "ssh-add -k" option to load only plain keys and not
! 247: certificates into the agent.
! 248: <li>ssh-add now supports loading keys from stdin ("program | ssh-add -")
! 249: <li>Allow graceful shutdown of the multiplexing socket (stop listening,
! 250: but don't interrupt existing connections), using "ssh -O stop".
! 251: <li>"ssh-keygen -A" will now automatically generate host keys of every
! 252: supported type
! 253: <li>Deprecated GlobalKnownHostsFile2, UserKnownHostsFile2 and
! 254: AuthorizedKeysFile2 options. Instead, the corresponding
! 255: GlobalKnownHostsFile UserKnownHostsFile and AuthorizedKeysFile
! 256: options now all accept multiple arguments.
! 257: <li>Add a RequestTTY option to ssh(1) to allow control over TTY
! 258: requests similar to the -t/-tt/-T commandline options.
! 259: <li>ssh_config(5) now supports negated host matching. E.g.
! 260: "Host *.example.org !c.example.org" will match "a.example.org",
! 261: "b.example.org", but not "c.example.org"
! 262: <li>Add experimental systrace(4) sandboxing of pre-auth sshd(8),
! 263: enabled using "UsePrivilegeSeparation=sandbox".
! 264: <li>Add new SHA-2 based HMAC modes for the SSH transport layer from
! 265: http://www.ietf.org/id/draft-dbider-sha2-mac-for-ssh-02.txt
! 266: </ul>
! 267: <li>The following significant bugs have been fixed in this release:
! 268: <ul>
! 269: <li>Fix hostbased authentication for hosts using ECDSA keys.
! 270: <li>Fix corruption of file information in sftp(1)'s ls display.
! 271: <li>Fix remote portforwarding with dynamically allocated listen ports.
! 272: </ul>
! 273: </ul>
! 274: <p>
! 275:
! 276: <li>Over 7,200 ports, major robustness and speed improvements in package tools.
! 277: <li>Many pre-built packages for each architecture:
! 278: <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 width="95%">
! 279: <tr>
! 280: <td valign="top" width="25%">
! 281: <ul>
! 282: <li>i386: 7008
! 283: <li>sparc64: 6456
! 284: <li>alpha: 6046
! 285: </ul></td><td valign=top width="25%"><ul>
! 286: <li>sh: 3721
! 287: <li>amd64: 6960
! 288: <li>powerpc: 6691
! 289: </ul></td><td valign=top width="25%"><ul>
! 290: <li>sparc: 3277
! 291: <li>arm: 2963
! 292: <li>hppa: 6125
! 293: </ul></td><td valign=top width="25%"><ul>
! 294: <li>vax: 1409
! 295: <li>mips64: 5689
! 296: <li>mips64el: 5709
! 297: </ul></td></tr></table>
! 298: <p>
! 299:
! 300: <li>Some highlights:
! 301: <ul>
! 302: <li>Gnome 2.32.2 <li>KDE 3.5.10
! 303: <li>Xfce 4.8.0 <li>MySQL 5.1.54
! 304: <li>PostgreSQL 9.0.5 <li>Postfix 2.8.4
! 305: <li>OpenLDAP 2.3.43 and 2.4.25 <li>Mozilla Firefox 3.5.19, 3.6.18 and 5.0
! 306: <li>Mozilla Thunderbird 5.0 <li>GHC 7.0.4
! 307: <li>LibreOffice 3.4.1.3 <li>Emacs 21.4, 22.3 and 23.3
! 308: <li>Vim 7.3.154 <li>PHP 5.2.17 and 5.3.6
! 309: <li>Python 2.4.6, 2.5.4 and 2.7.1 <li>Ruby 1.8.7.352 and 1.9.2.200
! 310: <li>Mono 2.10.2 <li>Chromium 12.0.742.122
! 311: <li>Groff 1.21
! 312: </ul>
! 313: <p>
! 314:
! 315: <li>As usual, steady improvements in manual pages and other documentation.
! 316: <li>Base system and Xenocara manuals are now installed as source code,
! 317: making grep(1) more useful in /usr/share/man/ and /usr/X11R6/man/.
! 318: <li>If both formatted and source versions of manuals are installed,
! 319: man(1) automatically displays the newer version of each page.
! 320:
! 321: - The system includes the following major components from outside suppliers:
! 322: <li>Xenocara (based on X.Org 7.6 with xserver 1.9 + patches,
! 323: freetype 2.4.5, fontconfig 2.8.0, Mesa 7.8.2, xterm 270,
! 324: xkeyboard-config 2.3 and more)
! 325: <li>Gcc 2.95.3 (+ patches), 3.3.5 (+ patches) and 4.2.1 (+patches)
! 326: <li>Perl 5.12.2 (+ patches)
! 327: <li>Our improved and secured version of Apache 1.3, with
! 328: SSL/TLS and DSO support
! 329: <li>OpenSSL 1.0.0a (+ patches)
! 330: <li>Sendmail 8.14.5, with libmilter
! 331: <li>Bind 9.4.2-P2 (+ patches)
! 332: <li>Lynx 2.8.7rel.2 with HTTPS and IPv6 support (+ patches)
! 333: <li>Sudo 1.7.2p8
! 334: <li>Ncurses 5.7
! 335: <li>Heimdal 0.7.2 (+ patches)
! 336: <li>Arla 0.35.7
! 337: <li>Binutils 2.15 (+ patches)
! 338: <li>Gdb 6.3 (+ patches)
! 339: </ul>
1.1 deraadt 340:
341: </ul>
342:
343: <a name="install"></a>
344: <hr>
345: <p>
346: <h3><font color="#0000e0">How to install</font></h3>
347: <p>
348: Following this are the instructions which you would have on a piece of
349: paper if you had purchased a CDROM set instead of doing an alternate
350: form of install. The instructions for doing an FTP (or other style
351: of) install are very similar; the CDROM instructions are left intact
352: so that you can see how much easier it would have been if you had
353: purchased a CDROM instead.
354: <p>
355:
356: <hr>
357: Please refer to the following files on the three CDROMs or FTP mirror for
358: extensive details on how to install OpenBSD 5.0 on your machine:
359: <p>
360: <ul>
361: <li>CD1:5.0/i386/INSTALL.i386
362: <p>
363: <li>CD2:5.0/amd64/INSTALL.amd64
364: <li>CD2:5.0/macppc/INSTALL.macppc
365: <p>
366: <li>CD3:5.0/sparc64/INSTALL.sparc64
367: <p>
368: <li>FTP:.../OpenBSD/5.0/alpha/INSTALL.alpha
369: <li>FTP:.../OpenBSD/5.0/armish/INSTALL.armish
370: <li>FTP:.../OpenBSD/5.0/hp300/INSTALL.hp300
371: <li>FTP:.../OpenBSD/5.0/hppa/INSTALL.hppa
372: <li>FTP:.../OpenBSD/5.0/landisk/INSTALL.landisk
373: <li>FTP:.../OpenBSD/5.0/loongson/INSTALL.loongson
374: <li>FTP:.../OpenBSD/5.0/mvme68k/INSTALL.mvme68k
375: <li>FTP:.../OpenBSD/5.0/mvme88k/INSTALL.mvme88k
376: <li>FTP:.../OpenBSD/5.0/sgi/INSTALL.sgi
377: <li>FTP:.../OpenBSD/5.0/socppc/INSTALL.socppc
378: <li>FTP:.../OpenBSD/5.0/sparc/INSTALL.sparc
379: <li>FTP:.../OpenBSD/5.0/vax/INSTALL.vax
380: <li>FTP:.../OpenBSD/5.0/zaurus/INSTALL.zaurus
381: </ul>
382: <hr>
383:
384: <p>
385: Quick installer information for people familiar with OpenBSD, and the
386: use of the "disklabel -E" command. If you are at all confused when
387: installing OpenBSD, read the relevant INSTALL.* file as listed above!
388: <p>
389:
390: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/i386:</font></h3>
391: <ul>
392: Play with your BIOS options to enable booting from a CD. The OpenBSD/i386
393: release is on CD1. If your BIOS does not support booting from CD, you will need
394: to create a boot floppy to install from. To create a boot floppy write
395: <i>CD1:5.0/i386/floppy50.fs</i> to a floppy and boot via the floppy drive.
396:
397: <p>
398: Use <i>CD1:5.0/i386/floppyB50.fs</i> instead for greater SCSI controller
399: support, or <i>CD1:5.0/i386/floppyC50.fs</i> for better laptop support.
400:
401: <p>
402: If you can't boot from a CD or a floppy disk,
403: you can install across the network using PXE as described in
404: the included INSTALL.i386 document.
405:
406: <p>
407: If you are planning on dual booting OpenBSD with another OS, you will need to
408: read INSTALL.i386.
409:
410: <p>
411: To make a boot floppy under MS-DOS, use the "rawrite" utility located
412: at <i>CD1:5.0/tools/rawrite.exe</i>. To make the boot floppy under a Unix OS,
413: use the
414: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=dd&sektion=1">dd(1)</a>
415: utility. The following is an example usage of
416: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=dd&sektion=1">dd(1)</a>,
417: where the device could be "floppy", "rfd0c", or
418: "rfd0a".
419:
420: <ul><pre>
421: # <strong>dd if=<file> of=/dev/<device> bs=32k</strong>
422: </pre></ul>
423:
424: <p>
425: Make sure you use properly formatted perfect floppies with NO BAD BLOCKS or
426: your install will most likely fail. For more information on creating a boot
427: floppy and installing OpenBSD/i386 please refer to
428: <a href="faq/faq4.html#MkFlop">FAQ 4.3.2</a>.
429: </ul>
430:
431: <p>
432: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/amd64:</font></h3>
433: <ul>
434: The 5.0 release of OpenBSD/amd64 is located on CD2.
435: Boot from the CD to begin the install - you may need to adjust
436: your BIOS options first.
437: If you can't boot from the CD, you can create a boot floppy to install from.
438: To do this, write <i>CD2:5.0/amd64/floppy50.fs</i> to a floppy, then
439: boot from the floppy drive.
440:
441: <p>
442: If you can't boot from a CD or a floppy disk,
443: you can install across the network using PXE as described in the included
444: INSTALL.amd64 document.
445:
446: <p>
447: If you are planning to dual boot OpenBSD with another OS, you will need to
448: read INSTALL.amd64.
449: </ul>
450:
451: <p>
452: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/macppc:</font></h3>
453: <ul>
454: Put CD2 in your CDROM drive and poweron your machine while holding down the
455: <i>C</i> key until the display turns on and shows <i>OpenBSD/macppc boot</i>.
456:
457: <p>
458: Alternatively, at the Open Firmware prompt, enter <i>boot cd:,ofwboot
459: /5.0/macppc/bsd.rd</i>
460: </ul>
461:
462: <p>
463: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/sparc64:</font></h3>
464: <ul>
465: Put CD3 in your CDROM drive and type <i>boot cdrom</i>.
466:
467: <p>
468: If this doesn't work, or if you don't have a CDROM drive, you can write
469: <i>CD3:5.0/sparc64/floppy50.fs</i> or <i>CD3:5.0/sparc64/floppyB50.fs</i>
470: (depending on your machine) to a floppy and boot it with <i>boot
471: floppy</i>. Refer to INSTALL.sparc64 for details.
472:
473: <p>
474: Make sure you use a properly formatted floppy with NO BAD BLOCKS or your install
475: will most likely fail.
476:
477: <p>
478: You can also write <i>CD3:5.0/sparc64/miniroot50.fs</i> to the swap partition on
479: the disk and boot with <i>boot disk:b</i>.
480:
481: <p>
482: If nothing works, you can boot over the network as described in INSTALL.sparc64.
483: </ul>
484:
485: <p>
486: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/alpha:</font></h3>
487: <ul>
488: <p>Write <i>FTP:5.0/alpha/floppy50.fs</i> or
489: <i>FTP:5.0/alpha/floppyB50.fs</i> (depending on your machine) to a diskette and
490: enter <i>boot dva0</i>. Refer to INSTALL.alpha for more details.
491:
492: <p>
493: Make sure you use a properly formatted floppy with NO BAD BLOCKS or your install
494: will most likely fail.
495:
496: </ul>
497:
498: <p>
499: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/armish:</font></h3>
500: <ul>
501: <p>
502: After connecting a serial port, Thecus can boot directly from the network
503: either tftp or http. Configure the network using fconfig, reset,
504: then load bsd.rd, see INSTALL.armish for specific details.
505: IOData HDL-G can only boot from an EXT-2 partition. Boot into linux
506: and copy 'boot' and bsd.rd into the first partition on wd0 (hda1)
507: then load and run bsd.rd, preserving the wd0i (hda1) ext2fs partition.
508: More details are available in INSTALL.armish.
509: </ul>
510:
511: <p>
512: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/hp300:</font></h3>
513: <ul>
514: <p>
515: Boot over the network by following the instructions in INSTALL.hp300.
516: </ul>
517:
518: <p>
519: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/hppa:</font></h3>
520: <ul>
521: <p>
522: Boot over the network by following the instructions in INSTALL.hppa or the
523: <a href="hppa.html#install">hppa platform page</a>.
524: </ul>
525:
526: <p>
527: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/landisk:</font></h3>
528: <ul>
529: <p>
530: Write <i>miniroot50.fs</i> to the start of the CF
531: or disk, and boot normally.
532: </ul>
533:
534: <p>
535: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/loongson:</font></h3>
536: <ul>
537: <p>
538: Write <i>miniroot50.fs</i> to a USB stick and boot bsd.rd from it
539: or boot bsd.rd via tftp.
540: Refer to the instructions in INSTALL.loongson for more details.
541: </ul>
542: <p>
543:
544: <p>
545: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/mvme68k:</font></h3>
546: <ul>
547: <p>
548: You can create a bootable installation tape or boot over the network.<br>
549: The network boot requires a MVME68K BUG version that supports the <i>NIOT</i>
550: and <i>NBO</i> debugger commands. Follow the instructions in INSTALL.mvme68k
551: for more details.
552: </ul>
553:
554: <p>
555: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/mvme88k:</font></h3>
556: <ul>
557: <p>
558: You can create a bootable installation tape or boot over the network.<br>
559: The network boot requires a MVME88K BUG version that supports the <i>NIOT</i>
560: and <i>NBO</i> debugger commands. Follow the instructions in INSTALL.mvme88k
561: for more details.
562: </ul>
563:
564: <p>
565: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/sgi:</font></h3>
566: <ul>
567: <p>
568: To install on an O2, burn cd50.iso on a CD-R, put it in the CD drive of your
569: machine and select <i>Install System Software</i> from the System Maintenance
570: menu.
571:
572: <p>
573: On other systems, or if your machine doesn't have a CD drive, you can
574: setup a DHCP/tftp network server, and boot using "bootp()/bsd.rd.IP##" using
575: the kernel matching your system type.
576: Refer to the instructions in INSTALL.sgi for more details.
577: </ul>
578:
579: <p>
580: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/socppc:</font></h3>
581: <ul>
582: <p>
583: After connecting a serial port, boot over the network via DHCP/tftp.
584: Refer to the instructions in INSTALL.socppc for more details.
585: </ul>
586:
587: <p>
588: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/sparc:</font></h3>
589: <ul>
590: Boot from one of the provided install ISO images, using one of the two
591: commands listed below, depending on the version of your ROM.
592:
593: <ul><pre>
594: ok <strong>boot cdrom 5.0/sparc/bsd.rd</strong>
595: or
596: > <strong>b sd(0,6,0)5.0/sparc/bsd.rd</strong>
597: </pre></ul>
598:
599: <p>
600: If your SPARC system does not have a CD drive, you can alternatively boot from floppy.
601: To do so you need to write <i>floppy50.fs</i> to a floppy.
602: For more information see <a href="faq/faq4.html#MkFlop">FAQ 4.3.2</a>.
603: To boot from the floppy use one of the two commands listed below,
604: depending on the version of your ROM.
605:
606: <ul><pre>
607: ok <strong>boot floppy</strong>
608: or
609: > <strong>b fd()</strong>
610: </pre></ul>
611:
612: <p>
613: Make sure you use a properly formatted floppy with NO BAD BLOCKS or your install
614: will most likely fail.
615:
616: <p>
617: If your SPARC system doesn't have a floppy drive nor a CD drive, you can either
618: setup a bootable tape, or install via network, as told in the
619: INSTALL.sparc file.
620: </ul>
621:
622: <p>
623: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/vax:</font></h3>
624: <ul>
625: Boot over the network via mopbooting as described in INSTALL.vax.
626: </ul>
627:
628: <p>
629: <h3><font color="#e00000">OpenBSD/zaurus:</font></h3>
630: <ul>
631: <p>
632: Using the Linux built-in graphical ipkg installer, install the
633: openbsd50_arm.ipk package. Reboot, then run it. Read INSTALL.zaurus
634: for a few important details.
635: </ul>
636:
637: <p>
638: <h3><font color="#e00000">Notes about the source code:</font></h3>
639: <ul>
640: src.tar.gz contains a source archive starting at /usr/src. This file
641: contains everything you need except for the kernel sources, which are
642: in a separate archive. To extract:
643: <p>
644: <ul><pre>
645: # <strong>mkdir -p /usr/src</strong>
646: # <strong>cd /usr/src</strong>
647: # <strong>tar xvfz /tmp/src.tar.gz</strong>
648: </pre></ul>
649: <p>
650: sys.tar.gz contains a source archive starting at /usr/src/sys.
651: This file contains all the kernel sources you need to rebuild kernels.
652: To extract:
653: <p>
654: <ul><pre>
655: # <strong>mkdir -p /usr/src/sys</strong>
656: # <strong>cd /usr/src</strong>
657: # <strong>tar xvfz /tmp/sys.tar.gz</strong>
658: </pre></ul>
659: <p>
660: Both of these trees are a regular CVS checkout. Using these trees it
661: is possible to get a head-start on using the anoncvs servers as
662: described <a href="anoncvs.html">here</a>.
663: Using these files
664: results in a much faster initial CVS update than you could expect from
665: a fresh checkout of the full OpenBSD source tree.
666: <p>
667: </ul>
668:
669: <a name="upgrade"></a>
670: <hr>
671: <p>
672: <h3><font color="#0000e0">How to upgrade</font></h3>
673: <p>
674: If you already have an OpenBSD 4.9 system, and do not want to reinstall,
675: upgrade instructions and advice can be found in the
676: <a href="faq/upgrade50.html">Upgrade Guide</a>.
677:
678: <a name="ports"></a>
679: <hr>
680: <p>
681: <h3><font color="#0000e0">Ports Tree</font></h3>
682: <p>
683: A ports tree archive is also provided. To extract:
684: <p>
685: <ul><pre>
686: # <strong>cd /usr</strong>
687: # <strong>tar xvfz /tmp/ports.tar.gz</strong>
688: # <strong>cd ports</strong>
689: </pre></ul>
690: <p>
691: The <i>ports/</i> subdirectory is a checkout of the OpenBSD ports tree. Go
692: read the <a href="faq/ports/index.html">ports</a> page
693: if you know nothing about ports
694: at this point. This text is not a manual of how to use ports.
695: Rather, it is a set of notes meant to kickstart the user on the
696: OpenBSD ports system.
697: <p>
698: The <i>ports/</i> directory represents a CVS (see the manpage for
699: <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=cvs&apropos=0&sektion=1&manpath=OpenBSD+Current&arch=i386">
700: cvs(1)</a> if
701: you aren't familiar with CVS) checkout of our ports. As with our complete
702: source tree, our ports tree is available via anoncvs. So, in
703: order to keep current with it, you must make the <i>ports/</i> tree
704: available on a read-write medium and update the tree with a command
705: like:
706: <p>
707: <ul><pre>
708: # <strong>cd [portsdir]/; cvs -d anoncvs@server.openbsd.org:/cvs update -Pd -rOPENBSD_4_9</strong>
709: </pre></ul>
710: <p>
711: [Of course, you must replace the local directory and server name here
712: with the location of your ports collection and a nearby anoncvs
713: server.]
714: <p>
715: Note that most ports are available as packages through FTP. Updated
716: packages for the 5.0 release will be made available if problems arise.
717: <p>
718: If you're interested in seeing a port added, would like to help out, or just
719: would like to know more, the mailing list ports@openbsd.org is a good
720: place to know.
721: <p>
722:
723: <hr>
724: <a href="index.html"><img height="24" width="24" src="back.gif" border="0"
725: alt="OpenBSD"></a>
726: <a href="mailto:www@openbsd.org">www@openbsd.org</a>
727: <br><small>
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